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    Ed_Haynes

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    Posts posted by Ed_Haynes

    1. The Medal Yearbook shows the stripes as running from lower left to upper right (like your certificate). But, then, the MYB is very often very wrong.

      These pesky diagonal ribbons!

    2. Interesting thread. With the exception of the Badge of Military Merit, I assume none of these were ever intended for wearing and were "commemorative table medals" rather than "[wearing] medals" in the sense we use the term and were unique pieces intended only for a specific individual and a particular moment. They represent that transition zone from one method or rewarding achievement to another more familiar one.

    3. One of the apartheid-era South-African-invented "bantustans" (the policy of so-called "Separate Development").

      Others have been covered here also: Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Ciskei, Gazankulu, KaNgwane, KwaNdebele. KwaZulu, Lebowa, and QwaQwa. South Africa also concocted some in Namibia.

      .

    4. As I said elsewhere, and am proud to repeat here, a nice one! :beer:

      The Special Service Medal's clasp was, of course, worn on the medal, not the medal ribbon (though there's an unfortunate current fashion of wearing teeny illegible miniature clasps on ribbon bars, thereby both enriching military tailors and making the ribbon bars cluttered).

    5. The most important modern work about Italian Medals & Decorations is the 2-volumes set of Adriano and Alessandro Brambilla "Le Medaglie Italiane degli ultimi 200 Anni" (Italian Medals from the last 200 Years): both volumes are now rare to find, but the author is completing the new revised and enlarged edition, fully illustrated in colour, that is planned to be published also in English, during the next year.

      One more very educational thread. Thanks, all. :beer:

      And the word on the new edition of this immensely rare book is good news indeed. Please keep us updated! :jumping::jumping:

    6. A nice thread, Darrell, thanks.

      (And, no, rest easy, I'll NOT drag this off into the various Durbar Medals! You are safe.)

      Just one more datapoint, though, the 1911 Coronation with clasp "Delhi" for those few Indian Army men (only non-Europeans, sorry) who were at both events. This one is named to 221 Lance-Naick Gurbhaji, 41st Dogra Regiment (Durbar roll, p. 456). Just 134 of this clasp were awarded. There was no standard method of attaching these loose clasps, and it was all up to the inventiveness of the regimental blacksmith.

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